external image 3235462.jpg

What to do when lining up in the classroom:

1. Only get out of your seat to line up when your table is called.
2. When called to line up, push in your seat and make sure your area is clean.
3. Look at our line chart to see if you are line leader, or the caboose.
4. Line up quietly and wait for further instructions.

What to do in the Hall:

1. Walk in a straight line.
2. Stay quiet, other students are still working!!
3. Do not touch or talk to the person in front or behind you.

What to do in the Lunch Room:

1. Talk with an inside voice.
2. Keep your hands to yourself.
3. Clean up after yourself. Make sure your trash is thrown away and you don't leave a mess.
4. Listen to the adults in the lunch room.

How the students will know to line up:

The students will know to line up when I count to ten and they will clap along while doing so.

How we will transition to a different Subject/ Transitions in general

1. The students will hear music ( I think I will choose mozart or some kind of classical, and also have some up-beat songs as well)
2. I,2,3 eyes on me: I say, 1,2, eyes on you: Students say.
3. Timer
4. Have a wand that makes noise, when they hear it they pause.
5. Remote muter: When they see the remote they quiet down
6. When the teacher puts a crown on their head, they are with a student and not to be bothered.
7. Teacher chair: When the teacher is sitting in it, everyone listens to just them. Could also let students teach as well when they sit in it.


Drop-Off Ideas

• Use the “Three Bears” story. Children of different ages can join in and participate in
the story.
• Have children bring a picture of Mom, Dad, or their family. They can look at the
picture whenever they feel the need.
• At our center, children eat breakfast shortly after they come. We wave to Mom or Dad
and then each child helps to get his or her high chair and tray set up for breakfast.
• Children can bring toys from home and hold on to them for about 5-10 minutes.
• Sometimes parents come in to get a child started in activities before they leave.

Clean-Up Ideas

• Give children a five minute warning before clean-up time to make the transition easier.
• We freeze when play time if over. The teacher calls out, “freeze.” The children freeze
right where they are and stand like statues. The I say, “Unfreeze and clean up.” And
they know play time is over and everyone helps in clean-up. They love it!
• Stamp children’s hands when they participate in clean-up.
• Make clean-up time a game to play with children.
• Tell children that if they clean-up they will get to pick out a special activity from a box.
Fill the box with slips of paper with several fun (short) activities. Have a child pull a slip
when clean-up is finished or before if another incentive is needed.
• Take a basket and carry it around the clean-up area. Sing the clean-up song as children
put toys in the basket.
• Sing a pick-up song.
• Turn clean up time into a game. Have a teacher close his/her eyes and ask the children
to surprise you by putting toys away. Ask the children to tell when you should “peek”
and see the clean room.
• Give the children rewards. Whoever picks up the most toys, papers, etc. gets a reward.
• Put on a favorite song and try to be finished by the time the music stops.
• Select Best Cleaner Uppers for reward or praise or as clean-up leaders.
• Count to 10 or 15. When you start counting they seem to start rushing to see who
finishes first. Give praise for a good job done.
• Offer children a prize (stickers) for helping to clean up.
• Offer a prize of “authority.” Whoever cleans up the quickest will be the teacher helper
and give out the cups or can “read” a book to the class or chooses where to line up or be
the one to hold the teacher’s clipboard.
• A parent gave us a copy of the “Bob the Builder” theme song. We use it for our cleanup
song with these words, “Can we clean up? Yes we can!” It’s very upbeat and the
children love it. The song talks about working together, etc.
• Have children jump like a frog to clean up and fly like a plane while bringing toys to the
shelves.
• Tess the Mess -- We dressed a person in a very messy fashion and asked her to come to
the center and show the children how to clean up. The children now talk about “Tess the
Mess” when they clean up.
• Sing the following to the tune of "I'm a Little Teapot"
I'm a little helper
See me clean
I can pick-up
and not be mean
When we're finished
You will see
A nice clean room
for you and me
Nap Time Ideas
• Use a wooden train set to transition to nap time. One by one, each child gets to be the
conductor. As they finish their circle, the conductor lays down on his or her mat until
they are all down for a nap.
• At naptime, we have the children take out their napping things and get a stuffed animal.
As the children lay down, we put on a tape of a book. The children listen to this story
every day like it was their first time hearing it. After the story is finished, most children
are calm and falling asleep. We put on soft music. Some days the children ask to hear
the story again. We would play it again, but most would be asleep by the time the story
is finished.

End of the Day Ideas

• Parents get child’s things ready and put them in the car before they actually get the
children.
• Have children help to get their things ready before leaving.
• We color for quiet time until the parents pick them up.
Walking from Place to Place
• Walking quietly -- Pretend there is a family of sleeping bears in the hall. Tell the
children, “We don’t want to wake the sleeping bears. Let’s tiptoe very quietly!” Be sure
to change the characters you’re pretending to be to keep the children thinking.
• Use a walking song when walking from one place to another. It helps children stay in
line and follow the leader. Try singing the following words to the tune of “Frere
Jacques.”
We are walking, we are walking.
Yes we are, yes we are.
First we walk the one way,
Then we walk the other way,
Yes we do, yes we do.
• Sing this waiting/walking song to the tune of “Alliegh, Aliega, Alliluaha”
Follow, follow, follow me.
Follow, follow, follow me
Follow, follow, follow me.
Follow, follow, foll ----oh
Foll—oh me.
• Children who are learning to use the bathroom chant or sing “Potty Patrol” as they walk
to and from the bathroom.
Transitioning a New Child
• Create a picture board or book with pictures of all the children in care and their names.
After the first visit, the new child can take home the picture board or book. When the
child starts care, add the new child’s picture to the board. You can play a game to name
the children, including the new child. This activity helps a child recognize the faces of
children in their class before they start a new program so they won’t be so scared.
General Transition Tips
• Raise your hand to quiet children. Teach children that when they see your hand in the
air, they are to raise their hands in the air and quiet themselves.
• Tell children what activity is coming next. For example: after the toys are picked up,
we will be going outside. Or after we eat our lunch, we will lay down for a nap.
• Have a picture board available to the children where you velcro picture clues. As you
finish one activity, take the picture down and hang a picture for the next activity for the
children to see what’s coming next. For example – use pictures of toys for free time;
pictures of food for meals or snacks; crayon pictures for art; musical notes for singing or
dancing, etc.
• Sing this song to the tune of “Do You Know the Muffin Man?” to help children wait:
Do you know my Shannon, my Shannon, my Shannon?
Do you know my Shannon? She goes to Ronna’s daycare.
Yes! I know my Chad, my Chad, my Chad.
Yes! I know my Chad. He goes to the child care center.
• We show our four and five-year-olds the clock. When the big hand is on the three, we
will start to clean up. When the big hand is on the six, it will be time for breakfast. They
look at the clock during play. When I give them a reminder – you have ten minutes
before clean-up – they look at the clock.
• To get everyone’s attention when we need to make a transition, we turn the lights off
for one to two seconds. We have large windows so the room is never very dark. They
know when the lights go out they need to stop, be quiet, and listen for the teacher’s
directions. It’s a great safety feature too. If the power ever goes out for any reason, we
know they will not panic but will look to the teacher for directions.